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The effect of concentration on the rate of a reaction

Practical Work for Learning. The effect of concentration on the rate of a reaction. Chemical reactions can be . …or slow. fast…. Learning outcomes. You will be able to ... evaluate different models for explaining the rates of reactions

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The effect of concentration on the rate of a reaction

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  1. Practical Work for Learning The effect of concentration on the rate of a reaction

  2. Chemical reactions can be ... …or slow. fast…

  3. Learning outcomes You will be able to ... • evaluate different models for explaining the rates of reactions • use experimental data to identify how the concentration of each reactant affects the rate of a reaction

  4. What you already know • Organise what you know about the reaction of marble chips with hydrochloric acid into three categories. • Practical techniques equipment and methods • Observations / data / summaries of dataincluding from previous experimental work, e.g. graphs, or statements summarising a trend/pattern • Explanations inferences, models, type of reaction, equations

  5. What is rate of reaction? • In a chemical reaction, reactants are used up and products form. • A + B  products • In this reaction A and B are the reactants. They are used up. • Rate of reaction is the rate at which reactants are converted to products.

  6. Models of rate • Collision theory can make qualitative predictions. • It can predict how the rate may change with • changing conditions – but not by how much. • A mathematical model can make quantitative predictions. • A rate equation is a mathematical model. • (This is different from the chemical equation for the reaction). • What is the relationship between rate and the concentration of acid in the reaction with marble chips?

  7. A mathematical model • The rate could be proportional to the concentration of acid: rHCl∝[HCl] or rHCl = k[HCl] rHCl = rate of change of concentration of HCl (mol dm–3 s –1) k = a constant (the rate constant) [HCl] = concentration of HCl (mol dm-3) If this wasthe mathematical relationship between rate and concentration, what would the graph look like?

  8. A mathematical model rHCl = k[HCl] • If the rate is proportional to the concentration of acid… • …the graph will look like this. • Double the concentration, and the rate doubles.

  9. A mathematical model • The rate could be proportional to the square of the concentration of acid: rHCl∝[HCl]2 or rHCl = k[HCl]2 If this was the mathematical relationship between rate and concentration, what would the graph look like?

  10. A mathematical model rHCl = k[HCl]2 • If the rate is proportional to the square of the concentration of acid… • …the graph will look like this. • Double the concentration, and the rate goes up 4 times (22).

  11. A mathematical model • Maybe the rate is constant and is not affected the concentration of acid at all: rHCl = k or rHCl = k[HCl]0 If this was the mathematical relationship between rate and concentration, what would the graph look like?

  12. A mathematical model rHCl = k • If the rate is not affected by the concentration of acid… • …the graph will look like this. • Double the concentration, and the rate stays exactly the same.

  13. Rate and concentration • So there are three possible models: rHCl = k This is called zero order ([HCl]0) rHCl = k[HCl] This is called first order ([HCl]1) rHCl = k[HCl]2 This is called second order ([HCl]2) To find the order of reaction for marble and acid we need to collect some data …

  14. Rate and concentration • So, how can you measure rate? • Rate cannot be measured directly. So what can we measure? • Time • Concentration • Volume of gas • Change in mass

  15. Rate and concentration • Rate of change of concentration cannot be measured directly. • It can be found by analysing measurements of concentration over time. • How fast is the concentration falling at any one time? The gradient of the concentration–time graph tells us about the rate. • A steep gradient means a fast rate. • A shallow gradient means a slow rate.

  16. Graph 1 • Here are the concentration–time graphs for two different reactions. • For each graph decide whether the rate is: zero order: rA = k • first order: rA = k[A] • second order: rA = k[A]2 • Explain your decision. Graph 2

  17. Graph 1 At any concentration the gradient of the graph is the same. So the rate of reaction is always the same. The rate is not affected by the concentration. • The rate equation is rA = k

  18. Graph 2 As the concentration decreases the gradient and therefore the rate of reaction also decreases. The rate is affected by the concentration. • The rate equation could be rA = k[A] orrA = k[A]2

  19. Problem • For this reaction, what is the rate equation? • CaCO3(s) + 2HCl(aq)  CaCl2(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l) • You cannot measure the concentration of hydrochloric acid directly. What could you measure instead? • We can measure something directly proportional to concentration: • volume of gas collected, or change in mass. • To do • aCarry out the experiment. bDraw graphs of the results to find out the rate equation.

  20. The reaction of marble chips with hydrochloric acid is first order with respect to hydrochloric acid. • rHCl = k[HCl] • Orders of reaction are experimental quantities. They cannot be deduced from the chemical equation for the reaction.

  21. Rate equations • For a reaction in solution: A(aq) + B(aq)  products • You could find therate of change of concentration of A (rA) • bymeasuring the concentration of A, during the reaction. • You could find therate of change of concentration of B (rB) • by measuring the concentration of B, during the reaction. • rA and rB might have different values. • It is important to state which substance the rate refers to when talking about rates of reaction.

  22. Rate equations • A rate equation can be used to describe the rate of change of concentration of substance A: • rA = k[A]m[B]n • The indices m and n tell you the ‘order of reaction’ • mis the ‘order of reaction with respect to reactant A’ • nis the ‘order of reaction with respect to reactant B’ • m+n= the overall order of the reaction • At this level you will only meet reactions which are zero, first or second order, although other orders are possible.

  23. Order of reaction: zero order • In a zero order reaction, m = 0 • The rate equation is: rA = k[A]0 or rA = k • What would the data look like • if you plotted [A] against time for this reaction?

  24. Order of reaction: zero order • The rate of change of [A] is shown by the gradient of the graph. • rA = k • The rate is constant. • For any concentration of A, the gradient of the graph (rate) is the same. The graph is a straight line. • The rate does not change if the concentration changes.

  25. Order of reaction: first order • In a first order reaction, m = 1 • The rate equation is: rA = k[A]1 or rA = k[A] • What would the data look like if you plotted [A] against time for this reaction?

  26. Order of reaction: first order • The rate of change of [A] is shown by the gradient of the graph. • rA = k[A] • The rate is proportional to [A]. • As [A] decreases the rate of reaction decreases, and the gradient of the graph decreases. • The graph is a curve. The time it takes for [A] to be halved (the half-life) is constant, whatever the value of the concentration you start with.

  27. Order of reaction: second order • In a second order reaction, m = 2 • The rate equation is: rA = k[A]2 • What would the data look like if you plotted [A] against time for this reaction?

  28. Order of reaction: second order • The rate of change of [A] is shown by the gradient of the graph. • rA = k[A]2 • The rate is proportional to [A]2. • As [A] decreases, the rate of reaction decreases rapidly, and the gradient of the graph decreases rapidly. • The curve of the graph is deeper than for a first order reaction. • The half-life increases dramatically as the reaction proceeds.

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